Projectile Motion
scalar
size or quantity, strength without a direction. ex. 55 mph
Vertical motion of a projectile
1. Force = Weight (the pull of gravity acting on the object) 2. Acceleration = -9.8 m/s/s 3. Velocity changes 9.8 m/s per second
Horizontal motion of a projectile
1. Force = none 2. Acceleration = none 3. Velocity is constant
Examples of projectiles
1. an object dropped from rest 2. an object thrown vertically upwards 3. an object thrown upward at an angle
Independent Components
Horizontal and vertical components of a projectile have NOTHING to do with each other.
Parabola
Shape of a projectile's path.
SOHCAHTOA
Sin A= Opposite/Hypotenuse Cos A = Adjacent/Hypotenuse Tan A = Opposite/Adjacent
In the absence of gravity and air, what happens to a cannon ball after it leaves the cannon?
Straight line motion in the same speed and direction.
Range
The horizontal distance traveled by a projectile.
Gravity
The only force acting on a projectile.
Trajectory
The parabolic path that a projectile follows
Magnitude
The size or amount of something.
Horizontal
Traveling across the X-axis
Vertical
Traveling along the Y-axis
Vector
Units that have both magnitude (strength) and direction. Ex. 20 N (North)
Projectile
a moving object with the only force acting upon it is gravity
Horizontal motion
has constant velocity..
Vertical motion
is accelerated
Component
one of two vectors, usually at right angles, whose sum is the resultant.
resultant
the vector sum of two or more component vectors